This
is the third in this three part series seen from the eyes of a British
woman who heartwarmingly and alarmingly shows America the destruction
of her own country via massive and unrelenting immigration.

�You
Americans are so fortunate to live in a country where the spirit of
truth still exists to such a large degree,� Shirley Edwards said.
�Despite all the problems in our world you still have freedom of speech.�

�At
one time, America represented to me the home of Cowboys, Skyscrapers,
Violent Police Programs, MacDonalds, Baseball and people who held
their hand to their heart when they sang the national anthem,� she
said. �I thought you were a funny lot. In the early 70�s I worked
with a few Americans in England. They were larger than life, and they
always stated that everything was �bigger and better� in America.
Yea, Yea! I thought you were very conceited.�

�Some
of our English engineers came over to you at that time and stayed;
they didn�t want to come back,� Edwards said. �We thought they were
traitors in the office. Today, they are successful business owners
in the states of Texas and Florida. The office and factory they worked
at here in England, lies derelict and sad. Flats are being built on
the derelict ground. The industry of that area has all gone. What
was once a busy and thriving town, lies waste. Shops are boarded up,
the factories have closed. Many of the once proud people there live
on Social Security. It is a ghost town. The area is still known as
The Black Country, because of the smoke that once poured out the many
factories throughout the towns surrounding the area. The air is cleaner
now, but the people lack the hard-working character that people once
admired. Often, when I am driving through I think of my friends who
left, and the spirit that called them.�

�My
first trip to your country was to Disneyland in Florida,� she said.
�We English love Mickey Mouse. I loved your cars, the signs, the food
and the weather, but I was a little peeved there were no English �tea
rooms� I searched everywhere for a cup of earl grey tea and a cucumber
sandwich. I decided I might just have to come over and open up an
English tea room in Florida. After all, we had received many of your
American imports in Britain. Children wore baseball caps in our streets,
back to front for goodness sake! I assure you I would have adapted,
honored your laws, your president, and respected your ways. I would
have loved to become an American.�

�Well,
while I was with you I picked up something else, but I couldn't quite
put my finger on it, but I was sad to leave,� she said. �But hey,
when I got home I had my cup of tea and settled back down into my
English ways.�

�So
the years have passed since then, and lots of bad things have happened,�
Edwards said. �They happen to us all. Death, disease, crime and suffering!
They are rampant, throughout the world. Your country has had more
than its fair share. Distortion of the truth is in every country.
We have watched the scenes on TV of people suffering. We watch debates
on our TV between the politics of England and the USA. Some people
here love your president, some do not. A lot of people blame America
for all the bad things in the world.�

�One
day though my heart was cut open, I too was suffering, it was different
to watching it on TV and I needed to understand something, to know
the truth,� she said. �I desperately needed to understand.�

�It
was listening to a radio program one day from your country that helped,�
she said. �It confirmed everything I knew inside. The truth. It was
a relief. Someone else knew the truth. But why wasn't I hearing it
in my own land? I didn't understand why no-one else knew. It opened
by eyes and my heart to want to know more. I was a novice, but rapidly
I started to see clearly what it was I loved about your country. It
wasn�t the weather, the food, the buildings or any of the characteristics
that make up an impression of a country. It was the spirit of Truth
and Free Speech that I could still hear there.�

�I
care for my country, I long for my England to return to how it used
to be,� Edwards said. �Its Englishness, it funny quirky ways. Tradition
and a sense of rightness. Its decency. Its justice, even its prudishness.
There was a time when people really spoke up. Most of all I long for
the Truth that once resided in this once great country to be in everyone�s
home. We are such a small island. I see it lost, out of control.�

�As
time has passed, I see that truth is inside me. At times I feel alone
in my country, but I know that there are others who love all things
good. I am fortunate that I know God reveals things, but I had to
have it confirmed from a land where it still lives larger than anywhere
else on the globe. For a while, at least, geography played a part
in putting me back on track, helping me to �remember� and confirm
what I knew inside. I still love old England, I am used to Fish and
Chips, Football Matches, Rainy Days, Country Lanes, Yorkshire Pudding
and The Royal Family. I know where to go, its ways and its customs.�

�Well,
I was walking along a little quaint English road here in Broadway
in The Cotswolds the other day, you know, it is the sort you Americans
love,� she said. �Quaint thatched cottages, old fashioned street lamps,
window boxes, when I spotted an American import. It was a Thomas Kinkade
shop nestled between a little grocery store and an antique shop.

�I
glanced over,� she said. �On the window was a painting of the New
York Sky Line and the once Twin Towers in the background, and a picture
of your flag, the stars and stripes. Well, I almost put my hand to
my heart, I felt a surge of thankfulness. Thank goodness, that somewhere
in the world Truth shouts louder than anywhere else. It is the truth,
it is God, that I love more than anything else. It really doesn�t
matter too much I�m this side the Atlantic, there are some common
bonds that distance cannot separate. Your country still sparkles.
Hang on to it. Fight for it. Don�t ever hand it over. Be well always.
With love, your English friend.�

The
one thing we learn from history is that we seldom learn from history.
What this interview shows you in simple terms is that citizens of
England are being overtaken, disrespected and displaced out of their
own country. Even as she spoke, Edwards was afraid to really spell
it out. But she respected that we Americans can STILL speak up and
speak out. You will note that she told us to fight for our country,
don�t ever had it over and hang on to it.

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As
Americans wake up across our country, it�s time to get moving. Another
American �woke up� and sent me a letter: �I had no idea what a mess
our country is in,� he said. �Now that I know the facts, I agree with
everything you said and will tell my friends and family about this
Titanic problem. It�s time to take action for our country.�

Go
to www.frostywooldridge.com
and click on �What you can do� and click on the 26-point action letter
to stop this nation-destroying madness. For you West Coast night owls,
every Thursday you can catch yours truly in Las Vegas, Nevada on Mark
Edwards� "Wake Up America" talk show on 50,000 watt KDWN-Am-720 10:00
PM to midnight PT, or on the worldwide Internet at www.wakeupamericafoundation.com
On the home page, click on www.americanvoiceradio.com
heard around the world. Five nights a week, Edwards engages patriots
from across the nation to bring you the latest on this nation-destroying
invasion. Also go to www.supportbordercontrols.com

Frosty Wooldridge possesses a unique view of
the world, cultures and families in that he has bicycled around the globe
100,000 miles, on six continents in the past 26 years.

He has written hundreds of articles (regularly)
for 17 national and 2 international magazines. He has had hundreds of
editorials published in top national newspapers including the Rocky Mountain
News, Denver Post, Albany Herald and Christian Science Monitor.

His first book, "HANDBOOK FOR TOURING BICYCLISTS"
by Falcon Press is available nationwide. His second book "STRIKE THREE!
TAKE YOUR BASE" by the Brookfield Reader published in January 2002. His
bicycle books include "BICYCLING AROUND THE WORLD."

Frosty Wooldridge has guest lectured at Cornell
University, teaching creative writing workshops, magazine writing at Michigan
State University, and has presented environmental science lectures at
the University of Colorado, University of Denver and Regis University.
He also lectures on "Religion and Ethics" at Front Range College in Colorado.

The
one thing we learn from history is that we seldom learn from history.
What this interview shows you in simple terms is that citizens of England
are being overtaken, disrespected and displaced out of their own country.